Now the only thing left for laptop-mode-tools:
* remove the lines sourcing /etc/default/acpi-support (search the
package source)
--
remove laptop-mode settings from /etc/default/acpi-support
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/244838
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubu
This bug was fixed in the package acpi-support - 0.131
---
acpi-support (0.131) lucid; urgency=low
* events/lenovo-undock, undock.sh: new scripts to handle the Fn+F9 "undock"
button on ThinkPads, which unfortunately nothing else handles. Thanks
to Jeffrey Baker for the firs
This bug as about the ENABLE_LAPTOP_MODE having nothing to do in package
acpi-support (another package).
(It was introduced there because some ubuntu dev once stuck an old unmaintained
laptop_mode scipt into acpi-support instead of using proper laptop-mode-tools
package, and later laptop-mode-to
This will be removed from acpi-support tools only once update-manager
has had a quirk added to propose removal of laptop-mode-tools on upgrade
from karmic. We do *not* want laptop_mode enabled for users by default.
--
remove laptop-mode settings from /etc/default/acpi-support
https://bugs.launch
On Wed, Dec 2, 2009 at 5:39 AM, ceg wrote:
> Micheal (Rooney), was that a desktop/server machine or a laptop on
> battery where the disk failed to spin up again?
It was a laptop, on battery IIRC. It wasn't failing to spin up again
though; the drive came back, the IO was just terribly thrashing
in
According to
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/pm-utils/+bug/239419/comments/5
the kernel's laptop_mode has been hardcoded to be enabled on battery all the
time anyway.
So it should be fine to just remove checking ENABLE_LAPTOP_MODE
in /etc/default/acpi-support from /etc/init.d/laptop-mod
Micheal (Rooney), was that a desktop/server machine or a laptop on
battery where the disk failed to spin up again?
--
remove laptop-mode settings from /etc/default/acpi-support
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/244838
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which
** Changed in: laptop-mode-tools (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided => Medium
** Changed in: laptop-mode-tools (Ubuntu)
Status: Confirmed => Triaged
** Also affects: acpi-support (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided
Status: New
** Changed in: acpi-support (Ubuntu)
Status: New =>
Last time I tried this with Hardy, the disks would turn off, but if I tried
to use the computer after not having done so in awhile, such as after being
on overnight, any activity would cause the disk I/O to thrash seemingly
indefinitely and the machine was unusable until a hard restart.
--
remove
I wonder if we can enable laptop-mode by default in Jaunty
(ENABLE_LAPTOP_MODE). Does anyone have any bug references to machines
that break when laptop-mode is enabled? With ENABLE_LAPTOP_MODE true,
the defaults in /etc/laptop-mode/laptop-mode.conf is to only actually
use laptop mode when on batter
** Description changed:
Binary package hint: laptop-mode-tools
Laptop-mode won't be activated unless ENABLE_LAPTOP_MODE=true is also
- set in /etc/default/acpi-support. (/etc/init./laptop-mode checks that)
+ set in /etc/default/acpi-support. (/etc/init./laptop-mode, /usr/lib/pm-
+ utils/sle
With Feature Freeze coming on Thursday, it's about time to get this and
related changes into Intrepid. Does anyone have time to come up with
some debdiffs?
--
remove laptop-mode settings from /etc/default/acpi-support
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/244838
You received this bug notification becau
Yes, /etc/default/laptop_mode seems more sane as a second config file
for laptop-mode-tools.
As you mentioned in Bug #250935 we have to keep in mind that enabling
the laptop-mode-tools by default is in fact a necessary change to fix
the load cycling issue for example.
IMHO laptop-mode-tools needs
/usr/sbin/laptop_mode actually checks /etc/default/laptop_mode for
ENABLE_LAPTOP_MODE, so that would be the easy, less intrusive way to
migrate it, without touching /etc/laptop-mode/laptop-mode.conf at all.
On a default install this file doesn't exist until now (only on powerpc
to disable it). So i
I guess the right thing would be to instead have it disabled by default
in /etc/laptop-mode/laptop-mode.conf, and stop looking in /etc/default
/acpi-support. For upgrades, this means people who had enabled it in
acpi-support will have to reenable it in laptop-mode.conf, unless we do
some ugly magic
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